| Literature DB >> 29861133 |
Olivier Duron1, Olivier Morel2, Valérie Noël3, Marie Buysse3, Florian Binetruy3, Renaud Lancelot4, Etienne Loire4, Claudine Ménard5, Olivier Bouchez6, Fabrice Vavre2, Laurence Vial4.
Abstract
Mutualistic interactions with microbes have facilitated the radiation of major eukaryotic lineages [1, 2]. Microbes can notably provide biochemical abilities, allowing eukaryotes to adapt to novel habitats or to specialize on particular feeding niches [2-4]. To investigate the importance of mutualisms for the exclusive blood feeding habits of ticks, we focused on a bacterial genus of medical interest, Francisella, which is known to include both virulent intracellular pathogens of vertebrates [5, 6] and maternally inherited symbionts of ticks [7-9]. Through a series of physiological experiments, we identified a Francisella type, F-Om, as an obligate nutritional mutualist in the life cycle of the African soft tick Ornithodoros moubata. Francisella F-Om mutualism synthesizes B vitamins that are deficient in the blood meal of ticks. Indeed, experimental elimination of Francisella F-Om resulted in alteration of tick life history traits and physical abnormalities, deficiencies which were fully restored with an oral supplement of B vitamins. We also show that Francisella F-Om is maternally transmitted to all maturing tick oocytes, suggesting that this heritable symbiont is an essential adaptive element in the life cycle of O. moubata. The Francisella F-Om genome further revealed a recent origin from a Francisella pathogenic life style, as observed in other Francisella symbionts [6, 7, 10]. Though half of its protein-coding sequences are now pseudogenized or lost, Francisella F-Om has kept several B vitamin synthesis pathways intact, confirming the importance of these genes in evolution of its nutritional mutualism with ticks.Entities:
Keywords: B vitamins; Francisella; hematophagy; symbiosis; ticks
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29861133 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834